Thursday, October 11, 2007

Conference photos at Modena are up

Four days of the International Conference of Image Analysis and Processing (ICIAP) in Modena.
I split them into two albums, first one is the conference part - talks, posters, my presentation, my hotel, cool buildings, interesting toilet, etc. and the second one is the highlight of welcome cocktail at the Ferrari Museum and the very grand conference dinner.






2007_09_10-13 Conference days2007_09_11-12 Galleria Ferrari & Conference Dinner






If you want more, there are more photos on the conference website photo page.

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

6.7% interest RaboPlus + $50 cash

Damned! I've already had an account with them as I blog about it here and here.

Anyhow, you the reader can take advantage of this:

As an SMSPup member, apply for a new 6.70% pa RaboPlus online savings account between Sunday 7th October and Saturday 13th October 2007 and we'll kick start your savings with $50 when your account is opened.
Important Note: To take up this offer, please quote SMS1007 in the promotional code field when you apply online. Conditions apply**.

raboplus.com.au/smspup

Wednesday, October 03, 2007

Amsterdam Photos are up

Yeap the photos are up.

Let me recall on the trip a bit. Before I set foot on Amsterdam, I had on my list several things I know about it - Tulips, Van Gogh, Red light district and diamond. I set out to see the later 3 and I did.

I reached Amsterdam late at night. It took me some effort to get to the Shelter City hostel as it's all dark and I didn't have a proper map of the area. But luckily a nice officer at the train station helped me up. Dutch people are nice. :)

Then I checked in the place, pretty crowded 8 beds dormitory. All other beds are already taken. I got a bed on top. The locker is outside the room. So I chucked my stuffs in the locker and went out for a night venture.
It's funny that the hostel is a Christian hostel with big "Jesus loves you" sign on the wall to greet the guests. But I found it rather strange that it is actually located within the red light district. And some of the girls' business locations are just besides an old church. Sin and savior have never been so close together. I have this irony in mind and one of the volunteer (a nice German girl with fantastic voice, and she played the guitar singing one song she wrote. I'm like melted) there shared a great vision with me that the church should really be at the dirtiest or sinnest place on earth, those people are the one most in need of salvation. I was awe struck, well said!

Anyhow, I did go deep into the redlight district as an observer of life in the very different part of the world. Lots of girls dressed in bikinis pose in their own windows to get business. Some are really good looking, but there are also some which made me pace faster. The good thing there I guess is the "No pimp allowed" law there, so all the girls will get what they get paid for without another layer of exploitation.
Another surprise I get is that I actually felt quite safe walking around there alone. It's very different from my imagination of mafia, sex trade, gang fight, guns and marijuana. I did see people rolling marijuana and smoking it in pub.

I took a boat trip on the day. It's a great way to experience the many canal and see the leaning buildings. They say "Nothing is straight in Amsterdam", the road at funny angles with each other, the buildings are leaning left and right, and even the people, hehe, it's the gay capital!

I went to Van Gogh Museum and learnt that he's another very sad and depressed artist. Artistic wise, there are nice paintings to see. That's all I can say. Haha! Oh, a surprise is that there are some Japanese geisha painting (typical Japanese style) that Van Gogh drew to learn different style of drawings.

I went to a diamond polishing factory to admire many diamonds and unexpectedly caught a Chinese tour group. So I got some free guided tour with an exclusive diamond sale behind locked security door. The factory has some Chinese employees to take care of the rich Chinese buyers. It's good to be Chinese. Haha! A random Caucasian tried to sneaked in like me and got told off without much difficulty.

After the diamond tour, I had all the things I wanted to see checked off my list!

Another interesting thing was the dinner. I went to a pub to have dinner - some sort of chilli mussel with salad, for 10 Euro. I ordered it and got myself a Heineken to sip. When it finally arrive, it's a huge pile! Pretty tasty, I can't help but to count them, it total at 70+. Great dinner!

I think that's about it for my Amsterdam 2 nights 1 day tour. Now go hit the photos.

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Dinner with my aunt and cousin

My Aunt (I call her San Gu, 3rd Aunt) from Melbourne just went to Malaysia and came to Perth to visit my cousin Siong for a week or so for the first time. She loves Perth.
She was scheduled to fly back to Melbourne on Tuesday, so we had a dinner on Sunday, 1 day after I got back.

Home cooking is best!


Pork ribs with chestnuts and mushroom, yummy.


Siong Ko's pudding dessert with caramel and pineapple. He must have a better photo and perhaps recipe on his website.


A photo together to mark the occasion.


I had so much food, and it's so great to see SanGu again, the last time was 2002 in Melbourne. And Siongko is going to Italy to meet up with his partner. They have a great page on Italy travel tips here.

Sneak peek of my trip photos

I arrived back to Perth last Saturday. Spent the last couple of days adjusting jet lag, unpacking, doing laundry, going through 2500 photos, stack of receipts, etc..

Here's a sneak peek of a collage of some of them.


I've put photos of the first 3 days up on picasaweb already. See below for links, or simply scroll down.
Flying with Emirates and landed in Dubai
London Day 1
London Day 2

Sunday, September 16, 2007

Venice is fantastic, Florence is stunning

Went to Venice on Friday. So happen that I bumped into Wojceich from Adelaide U at breakfast and he decided in 1 minute that he'll come with me to Venice. So we did and had a jolly great time with some 200+ photos. Venice is very beautiful. The water is greeny and looks clean. It is fantastic to go with someone.

Saturday, I met Alessandro at Fidenza and he drove me to a castle on a mountain at Bardi. It's not a touristy place so everything is in Italian and there castle is not super impressive like those with lavish paintings. The torture chamber is grouse. But I really enjoyed the alternative tour, seeing the country side from high up, and of course catching up with Alessandro.

We parted at about 3pm and I took a train down to Florence. It's already dark when I checked in and get myself settled, but I decided to went out for a walk. And the Duomo (cathedral) is simply jaw dropping. It literally stopped me and drew me to see it closer. I took some nice long exposure shot using only the floor as support without tripod, most shots turned out quite good. And there was a Charlie Chaplain buskler at one of the plazam very funny and entertaining.

Florence is currently my top ranked Italian city so far. Somehow, I just love it much more than other places.
Also the youth hostle I stay in (which is where I'm using the free internet) is great too. It is decorated vby many copies of paintings and sculptures by some local arts students. Very nice.

Thursday, September 13, 2007

Yes! Presentation is done

My first international presentation. Spent the whole day flashing up the presentation so that it makes more sense.

OK, they need to close the room now.

In short, it's done, and I enjoyed it.

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Amsterdam and no internet

There's no internet in the hostel I stayed in Amsterdam and I'm dead tired to write anything on the first night after a whole day of cycling in London, and a whole day of walking in Amsterdam the second night.

Now I'm in Modena, Italy. Conference is going on well. I'm very lack of sleep for many days due to flight schedule, and a long dinner last night that finished at around 1am. It was good though, a new Bologna friend took me and another new friend from Uni Malaya to a local italian restaurant and tried some authentic Modena food.

My presentation is at the last session tomorrow, shall prepare for it.

Saturday, September 08, 2007

London Day 2

8/9 Sat

I woke up after 6 hours of sleep at 7:30am, got myself ready and the luggages packed. Woke Sylvia up to let her know I'm heading off at 8:30am and let her know what happened the night before. Then she sent me to the tube at Turnham Green to catch the underground to Liverpool Street where I'll meet YikGio. The trip was smooth and I got there 15 mins earlier so I called Tanliang up for a chat.

YikGio showed up at 9:30am and I followed him home. His place is just <10m mins walk from the Liverpool Station, fantastic location. I dropped my luggages there and we set out for a whole day of bicycle tour of Central London.

It is awesomely awesome to see London on bicycle with a good friend who knows the places quite well. Wow, where do I start, we went to so many places. I think we started off at the Tower Bridge and ended at the National Museum. In between there were the Big Beng, Packingham palace, Westminster Abbey, Thames River, London Eye, Bolough Market, lunch at Chinatown with his landlord Paul, St Peter's Cathedral, etc..

The funny thing is that I didn't learn all these places in English, so the names really do not mean anything to me at all. It's until I translate it into their Chinese names, then I go "Wow! I'm at XXX!! It's unreal." Like the da ying bo wu guan, tai wu shi he, etc..

Cycling around London is fantastic although it could be a bit scary at times too. But it's a really efficient way to see the place. There's no way I could have covered so many landmarks in London in such a short time if not by cycling. And YikGio is a fantastic tour guide, he took many photos of me in front of the landmarks, which is something I don't get very much as a lonely traveller a lot of the time. Thank you very much my friend.

I'm now on my way to the Stansted airport to catch my flight to Amsterdam.
Photos should follow when I get time to load them up.

Updates:
Photos in my picasaweb

Windsor Castle, Oxford and dinner with Winson

As the title said, that's what I did today. Took quite some photos today. Need to sleep now. Watch this space for photos and details.

Friday, September 07, 2007

London Day 1

7/9 Friday

My first morning in London. The jetlag did not bother me much and I'm well adjusted from a late-nighter to a early-morninger by the jetlag. I woke up at 8:30am, Sylvia went out for an appointment already so I had some organic honey muesli myself.

Sylvia came back at around 9am+ and she made me some very nice omelette with smoked salmon, avocado and spring onion, on toast. It's fantastic. Then we decided to go to Windsor Castle together and after that I'd go to Oxford myself and come back to meet Winson at Fulham Broadway.

1 hour in Oxford, rush like mad. Saw a girl who looks like RongZuEr on train. Met Winson and his A level friend Jeff (a Medical researcher from from Malaysia living in Ireland).

Night back late, stucked at Earl's Court for half an hour got home at about 12:30am.

Updates:
Photos in my Picasaweb

Arrived London

I touched down London at 8:15pm local time. Took about 1.5 hours to clear the custom, so many people.
My cousin Sylvia came picked me up and we reached her home at 10-ish. Relaxed a bit and bath, now it's mid night at London, which is 7am Perth time. I was still rather hyper active when I reached London, I think I'm ready to collapse anytime now.

Good night world.

Thursday, September 06, 2007

Flying with Emirates and landed in Dubai

Emirates airline is fantastic. Movies, TV programs on demand, huge selections, altogether aboutmore than 500 channels to choose from! The screen is bigger than MAS and SIA and its a touchscreen! In addition, there are two live camera I can watch, one looking infront of the cockpit and another looking down to give a bird-eye view.

The air stewardess are very pretty and friendly too. Haha.
I got a window seat, but it really didn't matter because all three seats are empty, so I got 3 seats to lie down and had a good sleep. :)

The food are great. Breakfast was some cheesy crepe with salmon and baked tomato. I forgot to take a photo of the menu. :(
And the lunch was fried Hokkien noodle with seafood, and some salad with two small pieces of cooked salmon.

I watched a romantic pseudo musical "Because I said so" and half of Aaron Kwok's award winning "Father and Son" (After this we exile(?) was the proper name).
In the 11 hours flight, I slept (probably 5-6 hours), watch 1.5 movies, had two meals and went to toilet 4 times.

Oh by the way, there's WiFi on the aircraft also, and it's free to preview the inbox. To use it for 4 hours costs 10 USD. I didn't try.

Before landing at Dubai, I looked out the window, the sight is amazing! It's all sand, just a huge desert. And there are clusters of houses here and there connected by roads that looks like highways from the plane. And there are power line as well stretching vast distance. When it get close to the airport, suddenly there are patches of greens and knife-cut built-ups. The sight is just amazing! It's amazing that in the middle of a desert, a city is build and is flourishing.

Walking out of the aircraft was another shock. 35 degree celcius with high humidity. But tht only lasted for 20 seconds before I walked into a shuttle bus that took me into the airport.

The Dubai International Airport looks like any western airport with dutyfree liquor, cigar, perfume, huge posters, etc. The only difference is the people, many dressed like Arabic - white over cloth for man or black overcloth with veil covering everything except for the eyes for lady. Strangely, it looks to me that it is just as acceptable as any other clothing. The cultural/religeous stereotype somehow become relaxed when people are in a foreign land. This is probably my first bit of eye-opening experience on this big trip.

It's 2:30pm in Dubai now, 4 hours behind. I have another half an hour until boarding.

Updates 25/09/2007:
Photos are up at my picasaweb

Big trip Italy

I'm at the airport now, 5am in the morning. The flight is at 6am. 11 hours to Dubai, then transit for 2.5 hours, and the another 7.5 hours to London Heathrow. This will set a new reocord for me as the longest flight.

I'll spend 2 days in London, staying with my cousin Sylvia and will meet up with my Hobart housemate Winson and highschool mate Kenny (Yu4 Jie2).
After 2 days in London, I'll be off to Amsterdam for 2 nights 1 day. Then flight to Milan and make my way down to Modena where my conference will be.

The conference is 5 days, first day I'll only attend the afternoon session which is tutorial. I didn't plan to attend that as it cost 150 Euro and I didn't know who was presenting. But later the price dropped to 50Euro and Mubarak Shah is presenting. He's a leading researcher in my field and I read and use some of his papers. I'm very excited to be able to attend his tutorial.

Then it's 3 days conference. I'll be presenting my paper on Wednesday last session. (haven't brush up my last bit of presentation yet). Then I'll go to Venice for a day, Florance, Pisa (leaning tower) for 2 days. Naples (Pompeii) for a day and Rome for 3 days.

More updates will come with photos. Hope internet will be good.

Stay tuned.

Monday, August 27, 2007

Golden Rules for Career Success

I got this from my brother.

Golden Rules for Career Success - Richard Moran


Working as a business consultant all over the world, I have discovered some basic career-related rules that everyone should know—but many don’t.

  • Business is made up of ambiguous victories and nebulous defeats. Claim them all as victories.
  • Keep track of what you do; someone is sure to ask.
  • Be comfortable around senior managers, or learn to fake it.
  • Never bring your boss a problem without some solution. You are getting paid to think, not to whine.
  • Long hours don’t mean anything; results count, not effort.
  • Write down ideas; they get lost, like good pens.
  • Always arrive at work 30 minutes before your boss.
  • Help other people network for jobs. You never know when your turn will come.
  • Don’t take days off sick—unless you are.
  • Assume no one can/will keep a secret.
  • Know when you do your best—morning, night, under pressure, relaxed; schedule and prioritize your work accordingly.
  • Treat everyone who works in the organization with respect and dignity, whether it be the cleaner or the managing director. Don’t ever be patronizing.
  • Never appear stressed in front of a client, a customer or your boss. Take a deep breath and ask yourself: In the course of human events, how important is this?
  • If you get the entrepreneurial urge, visit someone who has his own business. It may cure you.
  • Acknowledging someone else’s contribution will repay you doubly.
  • Career planning is an oxymoron. The most exciting opportunities tend to be unplanned.
  • Always choose to do what you’ll remember ten years from now.
  • The size of your office is not as important as the size of your pay cheque.
  • Understand what finished work looks like and deliver your work only when it is finished.
  • The person who spends all of his or her time is not hard-working; he or she is boring.
  • Know how to write business letters—including thank-you notes as well as proposals.
  • Never confuse a memo with reality. Most memos from the top are political fantasy.
  • Eliminate guilt. Don’t fiddle expenses, taxes or benefits, and don’t cheat colleagues.
  • Reorganizations mean that someone will lose his or her job. Get on the committee that will make the recommendations.
  • Job security does not exist.
  • Always have an answer to the question, “What would I do if I lost my job tomorrow?”
  • Go to the company Christmas party.
  • Don’t get drunk at the company Christmas party.
  • Avoid working at weekends. Work longer during the week if you have to.
  • The most successful people in business are interesting.
  • Sometimes you’ll be on a winning streak and everything will click; take maximum advantage. When the opposite is true, hold steady and wait it out.
  • Never in your life say, “It’s not my job.”
  • Be loyal to your career, your interests and yourself.
  • Understand the skills and abilities that set you apart.
  • Use them whenever you have an opportunity.
  • People remember the end of the project. As they say in boxing, “Always finish stronger than you start.”

Thursday, August 23, 2007

Stack of photos from phone

I've downloaded a stack of photos from my phone.


On June 18, I received this RaboPlus hardware pass code generator for their internet banking. Read Rabobank 6.6% online saving account for details.
Oh, recently Australia has increased the interest rate again. The Howard government does not particularly welcome that as election is coming soon. But I'm happy as most banks followed by increasing their rate too. At this time, Raboplus is standing at 6.7% while BankWest at 7% (12-month introduction rate)!!


On July 6, I received a very heart warming gift from a Malaysian auntie, ChoonHo's mom. She was here on holiday for 2 months, I was the first new friend she met here in Perth and we had 4-5 good chats altogether. And before she left for Malaysia, she knitted me this scarf as a gift. Each knot is a blessing, she said. I'm so touched. I'm so blessed.


On July 7 (obviously), I got this cool parking docket.


On July 19, I witnessed a police chase. Some car thief was chased down by 8 police cars. It was raining and didn't want to get wet. So I only got a photo of the channel 9 news car illegally parked on verged.


That night, I had dinner with my housemates at HKBBQ. The tofu dish is fantastic!

So is the BBQ

and the squid.



On July 26, I took a panorama of my desk using the stitching program that come with my k800i.

Big Bowl Noodle House on William Street

I've downloaded a stack of photos from my phone.

On 18/6, I went to Big bowl noodle house the first time. It's fantastic! Big bowl. It's extra noodle is FREE! Very satisfying.
My favourite is the beef noodle soup.

The beef stomach noodle soup is great too.

Minced pork noodle is good too, just a pity that there is no vege.


The seafood one is pricey and ordinary. The cheese baked noodle are pretty good too, good to share, a bit too heavy for one person consumption.

Oh ya, the best bit is the chilli! Very very good sambal chilli. The price ranges from $8.90 to $14.90. Recommended!
And the friendly identical twin waitresses added a bit of fun too.

And when I googled to find more information about the shop, I found this blog that has many photos of the place, and a closer look reveals that it's actually a friend of mine, Kok Wei's blog. Hi! Kok Wei.
It has the address and shop front photos there if you'd like to try it.

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Luck Factor by Richard Wiseman

As part of the National Science Week activities, there was a public lecture by Prof Richard Wiseman titled "The Luck Factor". Richard is a professor of Psychology he was a magician before that part of his career started. It was a very entertaining lecture with magic tricks and public psychology experiments. I was fooled too! Fun!

Jason found one of the experiment online. It's an experiment to count the number of basketball passes among 3 white-shirt players. It's hard to get it because there are also 3 black-shirt players to confuse people.


There are some more cool experiments by Richard Wiseman on youtube and his quirkology website. I was fooled by the colour changing card tricks!

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Transforming the Mind, Yunus-style

Transforming the Mind, Yunus-style by Marina Mahathir.


There I listened to Dr Jonathan Mann articulate a very new concept to me, that a person's health is directly related to the human rights he or she is able to enjoy.

What underlies Prof Yunus' motivation is something extraordinary in these cynical times: he has total faith in the human spirit.In believing that every human being is at heart an entrepreneur and has skills that are under-utilised, Prof Yunus revolutionized the way we look at the poor. No longer are they to be looked down as incapable, unreliable, too ill-educated to better themselves. They are human beings who happened to be born in difficult circumstances which are no fault of theirs. As Prof Yunus likes to remind people, "Poverty is not the fault of the poor".

Sunday, August 19, 2007

UWA EXPO

It's Open Day again. This is my 5th time volunteering at the open day, and it's the last time also.

I helped set up most of the vision demo in the morning and talked to visitors about all these projects that I seems to know from listening to the creators explaining about them in previous years.

Most of the demos are from last year or year before. A couple of interesting thing to note:
1. A really cool face recognition system using a simple webcam that we downloaded from here. Visitors just love it. If you have a webcam, you can test it out too.
2. On last Friday 5pm+ I decided to print out a huge poster of Chinese Ascii arts to cover a big white wall in our demo lab. So I go to the code that I haven't touched for more than a year and got it to do what I wanted in 20 mins. Felt pretty good about myself. The end result is a 8x8 A4 sheets of Winthrop tower made up of Chinese characters. A couple of visitors were very impressed by that. One of them said "It's the coolest thing I've ever seen in my life!". I was happy with that.


More photos are on my photo gallery

Online Virtual UWA

A quick note on the virtual UWA project I've been involved. It's launched last Friday and well received. All the ungodly hours spent on the 3D modelling was glorified.

Read the story here.

This Winthrop Hall model is one of my work.


The virtual UWA is online at http://www.csse.uwa.edu.au/virtual and you can choose an avatar and see many panorama views of UWA. Need to download the BS Contact to see it, the instruction is on the site.
At this moment, the 3D models are not up yet. Eventually they will.

Sunday, August 05, 2007

Meeting with my minister

Last Friday I was invited by Somun the student coordinator of AMBC to attend a meeting with the minister of International Trade and Industry of my country - the YB Rafidah Aziz. She and her team of representatives are on a trade mission to Australia and Perth is their last stop.



She speaks well, with a sense of humour and a no-nonsense kind of attitude. Her directness is quite funny at one time when she was directing the delegates' attention to one of the information CD and here's what happened - she took out the CD, looked at it and said "What is this CD about? I can't even read the title, the title is too small! Who prepared this?" and she looked at her subordinates, "These people just played with graphics, what's the point of putting the twin tower, fireworks so big and you can't even read the words!"


The lunch was great! Well, it's at the Hyatt Regency Hotel.


And it's a courtesy of the Malaysian government. I felt a bit uneasy about that so I made it a point to make some contribution out of my attendance.

Over lunch I got a chance to talk to the director of a software company in Malaysia that just signed a partnership contract with an Aussie company. They might be able to get me a job when I get back. I also got in contact with the treasurer of MASCA WA, Everlyn, a nice young curtin student, I also caught up with Kay Sen, ISS liaison officer at UWA.
(ya, it's more natural to look at the LCD instead of the lens)

After the lunch, that's the student meeting with minister and 4 members of parliament who came along with the trip. The minister seems down to earth during the dialog, she made it very safe for us to ask questions and express our concerns, by asking us to address her as Auntie Rafidah and treat her like an elderly relative. That worked quite well and many Q&A was exchanged. One student got a smack on the hand by addressing her straight as Rafidah. One asked her about the state of Proton and why the import tax for cars is still so high and she shared some interesting stories about the past managements which I won't reproduced here.
Another student touched on the education system that focuses more on paper than practical and she answered as it's a culture that is ingrained and needs to be changed.

I got my guts up and ask her opinion on the concern that I have which I think is shared by many young non-Malay professionals who are currently overseas, ie I'm going back (or some are thinking about going back) to serve the country but am deterred and frightened by the many racist remarks of ministers and unfair racist incidents towards the non-Malays. Her answer was along the line of - "for god's sake, please do not ever look at any issue as Chinese or Malay or Indian! We are all Malaysian! There are some idiots who said something inconsiderate and that does not represent the mass of the parliament and the government's view." I hope it's the true words and not just lips service.

Then another student raised the issue that they don't have a venue to organise event for Malaysian students, the Consul General briefed that there's a plan of Malaysia House under AMWA to accommodate this need. With much hesitation, then being pressed by the minister, the student expressed that AMWA members are mainly Chinese... And "Auntie Rafidah" straight away told off the student right on the face that "Do not ever think of going down that path!". And she reiterated that Malaysian is Malaysian, not Malay or Indian or Chinese! If there's to be a Malaysia Hall, it will be for all Malaysians.

Seems like we still have a long way to go for the nation building, but I'm glad that the minister took the strong view of "all Malaysians" and taught the student a lesson! The director of the Malaysian Student Department from Sydney also reiterated that its department is there to help all Malaysian students, not just the government sponsored ones.
Also, a new officer to look after Malaysian students here in Perth was requested as Perth has about 4000 Malaysian students, the second largest in Australia, and the minister was supportive about it, and it may just happen next year.

At the end, we took some happy snaps. Overall, it was a great meeting.


More photos are on AMWA photo gallery, which I maintain.
http://www.amwa.org.au/gallery/

Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Butterfly lovers in Perth from Malaysia

Google alerts me about this Butterfly lovers in Perth from Malaysia article in The Star newspaper.

I actually watched it here in Perth on 10 June. It's good and I really enjoyed it. I got a free ticket from a friend of mine. And I was pleasantly surprised to find out that it's from Malaysia! Most of them speak well-trained Mandarin, I'm quite impressed. A few still sound funny. :P

I thought the staging is impressive too.

It took awhile for The Star to pick up the story.

Friday, July 06, 2007

Peak Oil: Life After the Oil Crash

It was 2 years ago when I first came across the peak oil issue. I had started to read into this issue and the facts and claims are truely alarming.

Petronas has just announced that Malaysia will be net oil importer in 3 years time! It is time to really get to know the issue if you haven't. The world financial system is based on Oil, it is unlikely to sustain when after the oil crashes. Read here:
Peak Oil: Life After the Oil Crash

RantingsbyMM: Sage Advice from a Dropout

Great graduation address at Harvard by Bill Gates:

Sage Advice from a Dropout

Sunday, July 01, 2007

Firefox 2.0.0.4 Bug

I just updated to Firefox 2.0.0.4 and the middle mouse click (open link in new tab) doesn't work!
It's the very reason why I initially switched to Firefox from IE many years ago. Man! How do I surf the net without this function?

Is anyone else using that? Am I the only one having this crazy bug?
Not happy. :(

Updated:
Oh, it's actually not a Firefox bug, but the SuperT add-on bug! Well, it works now after SuperT is disabled.
Life's Good. :)

Friday, June 29, 2007

Kazoo Yen & physical Nonsense


Danno is finishing his phd up and going to leave soon. He gave me this gift that has my name in it. A kazoo and a 1 Yen coin. Ingenious!


And I'm so touched and delighted to receive a paper copy of the Only Talking Nonsense. It's really cool to read his blog about things that happened around his life which I share some scenes, but it's a totally different and amazing feeling to get a book of that which has my photos, my stories and a lot of my fond memories recorded.



Thanks Danno. You rock!
With the glory of Lordiness you bestowed on me, I forgive you for making up all the posters about me. Haha!
Well, I was never offended to start with, not even this one below and this tzu-yen.blogspot.com website. It's such great fun! You bloody pranker!


Thank you for your friendship Danno, I'm truely honoured.
I wish you all the best.
(And hope we get to execute some more pranks together shall the victims' fate destined. Muahahaha!! )

Monday, June 25, 2007

Sunday, June 17, 2007

Throw a paper plane Return



The Throw a paper plane game I posted had some very good responses. And some readers had challenged me to train harder. So I took the advice and trained.

I got 114.775m and ranked 1180. And I found a trick (or cheat) to get that score consistently, every time, no sweat! Click on the image to see the trick.

However, with that trick, now I cannot get pass my own highest score which I got in the first few attempts of the trick. I spent an hour after that trying variations of it but I just couldn't break it anymore.

Leave a comment if you found some other tricks.
I wonder how 1179 others get scores higher than this?

Updated:
My brother took this trick and perfected it to 114.835m ranked 918. 200+ people within this tiny 0.06m?! He thinks he has found the optimum configuration, the rest is due to hardware speed. I shall try on different computer and see if it does change the result.


Update 2:
Better training, better results! Seems like more people are good at it now.

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

acsii autostereogram, great message

stereo.txt

Source: http://www.lce.hut.fi/~ikalliom/stereo.txt

Monday, June 11, 2007

I make confusing road signs



I've got some result for my phd to show today. Take a road sign and swap the direction.
With 4 points correspondance, it's rather straight forward to compute the projective relationship (homography) between two planar surfaces. The novelty of this work is the smooth and perspectively correct interpolation of the transition.

You might have seen planar surfaces flying around in space in other animation work before. The difference is that those work are done in 3D space so the 3D coordinates of the objects need to be specified and then the scene projected (rendered) on 2D screen. Mine works in 2D - a 2D photograph and some corner points as input, the algorithm works out the homography, decompose it into perspective, scale, rotation and translation components and interpolates the picture properly.

Cool! I think it is.

I created a related page on my CSSE website here with animated gif.
Projective interpolation for animation

Friday, June 08, 2007

Throw a paper plane

This is addictive!
Paper plane game

I ony managed to throw it out of the windows once.
My record: 37.68m.

I challenge you!

What does graphic designers do when they don't have work

What does graphic designers do when they don't have work

Like to have the birddog as pet. :D

Wednesday, June 06, 2007

Prime Minister of Malaysia Re-marry

From Malaysiakini:

Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi will marry Jeanne Abdullah, 53, in a private ceremony at his official residence Sri Perdana in Putrajaya on Saturday.

The official announcement in Malay is here.

Congratulations Pak Lah! I wish you and Jeanne a fulfilling relationship.
And may the marriage provide you extra strength and will to lead Malaysia to the future you envisioned and inspired us.

See photo of Jeanne on JeffOoi.
Abdullah's wife Endon passed away in Oct 2005.

Stupid thesis will be defeated

Stupid thesis will be defeated
Have your speaker on.

Thanks Danno, I'm inspired.

Tuesday, June 05, 2007

Abi-station 似顔絵 face drawing

I made this picture several years ago on a japanese website. Recently I digged it out and used it on my MSN and was asked by several friends how I drew it. But I couldn't remember which website it was.

Coincidentally, I was looking at caricature generation for my research and came across this Web Picasso paper by a Japanese researcher and he has a website in Japanese with some drawings and explanations. Suddenly I recall this word "似顔絵" was the same word on the website that I used to generate this above picture. I googled it and there it is at the top:

似顔絵

The only problem now is that it is all in Japanese, trial and error will get you there.

Friday, June 01, 2007

Rabobank 6.6% online saving account

The second best after Bankwest 6.8% 1-year introductory offer. My one year offer will expire in October, then I may switch it to this one.

It also allows its clients to go straight into wholesale managed fund with 0.75% entry fee, zero ongoing maintenance fee and a tiny $250 entry value.

Report on The Australia (29/5/07) here:
Rabobank goes retail with a high-interest internet account

It boosts with very high standard of internet security, voted the safest bank in the world in 2006. The online login system is not the simple client number and password form boxes, but requires a one time access code generated by a Digipass hardware based on your pin number. And each Digipass hardware response to only one pin, ie your password! Read more here on RaboPlus security.
Reading that I'm now a bit puzzle! Do they actually send me a hardware?? I shall see.

Also it's one of the top 20 world largest financial institution. Sounds pretty good!

The website is at raboplus.com.au.

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Buffalos save calf from lions and crocs

Found this video on spinboy's stuff: Nature rocks!. Very cool!

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Vandalism in front of my house


That's my unit through the broken glass hole. The other 2 bus stops at UWA were also damaged.

Saturday, May 12, 2007

Malaysiakini exclusive interview with Dr Mahathir

Three parts video on Malaysiakini:
Part 1
Part 2
Part 3

Hillarys


They got KL wrong! Shame on them.

We went to a cafe at Hillarys boat harbour after AMWA youth went to AQWA.

More photos on amwa website.

Friday, May 11, 2007

Microsoft Libra

I stumbled upon this Libra search, looks like it is the Microsoft version of Google Scholar.

It has a good breakdown on computer science fields, the conferences in each field, the number of publications in the search and their number of citations.

Here are links to Peter, Amitava, and myself.

The browse by author feature is pretty cool. A straight fight of citation. Andrew Zisserman is at the top of computer vision, followed by Faugeras!

Thursday, May 10, 2007

Food


Indian vegetarian

My office space


A fish eye view of my office.
Ok, stop playing with my phone and get back to work!

Tuesday, May 08, 2007

Jason juggling


Yeah! This is really cool. I can blog straight from my k800i. Yes, without computer.
And jason happened to come to my desk and i can test this. :-D

Monday, May 07, 2007

Test 2


More

The tree


Testing blogging from mobile phone.

Saturday, May 05, 2007

Italy here I come

The long anticipated email finally came today at 3:30pm WST. It was supposed to be announced on 1 May, and I thought my paper is rejected because I didn't get the "notification of acceptance" on the date.

Congratulations - your paper #1569032579 ('Projective Transformations for Image Transition Animations') for International Conference on Image Analysis and Processing 2007 has been accepted for ICIAP 2007 Oral Session.


Yes! My second paper (yes,only) is accepted. I'm so happy!
ICIAP is a 2nd tier conference according to CORE ranking of ICT conferences. And it'll be in Italy which is somewhere I have never really thought of setting my foot on before. Oh well, I never really think of going particularly anywhere anyway. Haha!

The conference will be on 10-14 Sept 2007, held in the Palazzo Ducale (dated 1634 DC, Baroque Ducal Palace) in Modena "the capital of engines" as it is the home of many famous sports car manufacturers (eg. Ferrari). A tourist page of Modena is here.

Searching and reading about the touristy places makes me excited.

Wednesday, May 02, 2007

The next level of Super Horatio

Here's a MSN conversation Danno and I had before the Super Horatio Theme Song come to live!

"Danno the Eternal Smartass" says:
you're gonna kill me...
(i)TzuYen - does research, eats vegies says:
uh?
(i)TzuYen - does research, eats vegies says:
why?
"Danno the Eternal Smartass" says:
you'll see in the next hour or so!
(i)TzuYen - does research, eats vegies says:
The super horatio blog?
"Danno the Eternal Smartass" says:
let's just say super horatio has gone to a new level
"Danno the Eternal Smartass" says:
yeah i'm gonna post something as soon as i finish it.
(i)TzuYen - does research, eats vegies says:
Haha! Well, I shall see.
"Danno the Eternal Smartass" says:
damn. I look for jobs to avoid work. I do super horatio stuff to avoid applying for jobs!
..........
"Danno the Eternal Smartass" says:
this SH thing had better turn out good!
..........
"Danno the Eternal Smartass" says:
super horatio is coming.
(i)TzuYen - does research, eats vegies says:
done?
"Danno the Eternal Smartass" says:
just compressing it
(i)TzuYen - does research, eats vegies says:
What? A video?
"Danno the Eternal Smartass" says:
:P
(i)TzuYen - does research, eats vegies says:
Oh oh....
"Danno the Eternal Smartass" says:
hehehe
"Danno the Eternal Smartass" says:
uploading now
"Danno the Eternal Smartass" says:
there you go, link in my name
"Danno the Eternal Smartass" says:
or http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sJzhfvIHQpg


Here's the ingenious work our resident joker/musician Danno did:

Click here for Lyrics.

Friday, April 20, 2007

Inversions by ScottKim

Very cool Inversions by ScottKim.

Tear in my eyes

Dearest to my heart, the people that I love,
I'll take some time now, I pause, and I make a choice,
about what my life is really for.


Prepare tissues.


(Nick, thought of you because of these videos)

Monday, March 19, 2007

My cousin, Siong

I met up with my cousin Siong today morning. Man! I didn't know how he could recognise me?! I was there making a phone call before going to search for him ( I have no idea how anyway, thought maybe just call him when I can't find him), then this man just come straight to me calling my name unmistakably. I haven't seen him for maybe 20 years? I simply have no recollection of seeing him before. Maybe he my parents showed him some of my photos when he visited them couple of years ago.

Anyway, we sat down and had a great chat and getting to know each other. He's really cool. Yes, you are. (Yes, siong ko, I expect you'd read this sooner or later. :P )
It's great to have a cousin close by.

He's a chef in-training. And here's his foody blog. Don't click the link without a full stomach! Man! The food looks good!

Siong Ko, when do I get to taste some? :P~~

Those has me on MSN will be familiar with my "(i) TzuYen - does research, eats vegies." My cousin calls the world to "live mad, eat chilli". HaHa! Is it just coincident or is it a family expression?

I'm travelling

I'm going off to China again tomorrow.
After that I'll be in Singapore and Malaysia for 2 weeks.

:D

Saturday, March 17, 2007

My David Suzuki's videos posted on Youtube.

I was going through some photos last year and watch this video of David Suzuki that I tool with my Canon PS S3IS. It's so inspiring even after half a year. So i decided I should share it with the world.

David Suzuki on World Scientists' Warning to Humanity (1992)


David Suzuki on Kyoto Protocol

Wednesday, March 14, 2007

Prangstgrup - Reach! A Lecture Musical Prank!!

A fantastic prank at a lecture, and it's a musical!

Danno showed it to me as he found my lightning yellow jumper in there.

Thursday, March 08, 2007

PhD survival guide

Another PhD survival guide I stumbled upon.

Tuesday, February 20, 2007

Perth virtual tour

I found this migrate360 website with lots of Quicktime VR virtual tour of Perth . These guys had took some good photos of Perth. It'd be quite a nice job, running around the country taking nice 360 degree photos.

Teh site requires registration to view. If you can't be bother signing in, use this bugmenot account I created.
Username and password are both "bugmenot". :)

Here are some nice ones:
Perth: from Kings Park|London Court|Belltower
Freo: Round House|Maritime Museam|Townhall
Water: Cottesloe|Hillary|Burswood

Run Danno Run

Sunday, February 11, 2007

Masak masak - Food on Malaysia

I stumbled upon this blog about Food in Malaysia from sabahan.com.

And there is a recently post about 福州光饼 Foochow kongpiah (plain bread) in my hometown.

Wednesday, February 07, 2007

Working @ Google - Software Engineer, Computer Vision and Graphics

Software Engineer, Computer Vision and Graphics - Mountain View

I think working at Google is really cool! And I do love organising information.
I'm delighted to know that they want some Computer Vision and Graphics experts. Maybe I'll work there one day.

Damned C/C++! I don't have extensive experience with that!! :(

Tuesday, February 06, 2007

Friends theme song

Shih Ching showed me this. It's funny!



Friends theme: I'll Be There for You by the Rembrandts

So no one told you life was going to be this way.
Your job's a joke, you're broke, you're love life's DOA.
It's like you're always stuck in second gear,
Well, it hasn't been your day, your week, your month, or even your year.

But, I'll be there for you, when the rain starts to pour.
I'll be there for you, like I've been there before.
I'll be there for you, cause you're there for me too.

You're still in bed at ten, the work began at eight.
You've burned your breakfast, so far, things are going great.
Your mother warned you there'd be days like these,
But she didn't tell you when the world has brought you down to your knees.

That, I'll be there for you, when the rain starts to pour.
I'll be there for you, like I've been there before.
I'll be there for you, cause you're there for me too.

No one could ever know me, no one could ever see me.
Seems like you're the only one who knows what it's like to be me.
Someone to face the day with, make it through all the rest with,
Someone I'll always laugh with, even at my worst, I'm best with you.

It's like you're always stuck in second gear,
Well, it hasn't been your day, your week, your month, or even your year.

But, I'll be there for you, when the rain starts to pour.
I'll be there for you, like I've been there before.
I'll be there for you, cause you're there for me too.

Sunday, February 04, 2007

Frog or Horse?

Saturday, February 03, 2007

Do-Gooders With Spreadsheets

I read this from MM's Rantings. I thought it's worth re-posting it on mine.

Do-Gooders With Spreadsheets

By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF
Published: January 30, 2007

DAVOS, Switzerland

The World Economic Forum here in Davos is the kind of place where if you let yourself get distracted while walking by a European prime minister on your left, you could end up tripping over a famous gazillionaire — and then spilling your coffee onto the king on your right. But perhaps the most remarkable people to attend aren’t the world leaders or other bigwigs.

Rather, they are the social entrepreneurs. Davos, which has always been uncanny in peeking just ahead of the curve to reflect the zeitgeist of the moment, swarmed with them.

So what’s a social entrepreneur? Let me give a few examples among those at the forum in Davos.

• In Africa, where children die of diarrhea from bad sanitation, Isaac Durojaiye runs a franchise system for public toilets. He supplies mobile toilets to slum areas, where unemployed young people charge a small fee for their use. The operators keep 60 percent of the income and pass the rest back to Mr. Durojaiye’s company, Dignified Mobile Toilets, which uses the money to buy new toilets.

• Nic Frances runs a group that aims to cut carbon emissions in 70 percent of Australian households over 10 years. His group, Easy Being Green, gives out low-energy light bulbs and low-flow shower heads — after the household signs over the rights to the carbon emissions the equipment will save. The group then sells those carbon credits to industry to finance its activities, and it is now aiming to expand globally.

• In the U.S., Gillian Caldwell and her group, Witness, train people around the world to use video cameras to document human rights abuses. The resulting videos have drawn public attention to issues like child soldiers and the treatment of the mentally ill. Now Ms. Caldwell aims to create a sort of YouTube for human rights video clips.

Social entrepreneurs like Ms. Caldwell resemble traditional do-gooders in their yearning to make the world a better place, but sound like chief executives when they talk about metrics to assess cost-effectiveness. Many also generate income to finance expansion.

“We’re totally self-sustaining,” said Mirai Chatterjee, a dynamo who is coordinator of the Self-Employed Women’s Association in India. “From Day 1 our idea was to run a strong economic organization.” Ms. Chatterjee’s organization now has nearly 1 million members, owns a bank, runs 100 day care centers, trains midwives and provides health insurance for 200,000 women. It is empowering women and fighting poverty across a growing swath of rural India, and its down-to-earth approach is characteristic of social entrepreneurs.

“Politics is failing to solve all the big issues,” said Jim Wallis, who wrote “God’s Politics” and runs Sojourners, which pushes social justice issues. “So when that happens, social movements rise up.”

Muhammad Yunus, who won the Nobel Peace Prize last year, demonstrated with Grameen Bank the power of microfinancing. His bank has helped raise incomes, secure property rights for women, lower population growth and raise education standards across Bangladesh — and now the success is rippling around the globe.

One of those inspired by Mr. Yunus, for example, was Roshaneh Zafar, a young Pakistani economist. She quit her job and started Kashf, a microfinance institution that now gives hundreds of thousands of Pakistani women a route out of poverty.

Ms. Zafar also received help from Ashoka, a hugely influential organization for social entrepreneurs started by an American, Bill Drayton (who describes social entrepreneurs as “the most important historical force at work today”). Ashoka is one of a growing number of donor groups that offer the equivalent of venture capital for social entrepreneurs.

“The key with social entrepreneurs is their pragmatic approach,” said Pamela Hartigan of the Schwab Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship, which is affiliated with the World Economic Forum. “They’re not out there with protest banners; they’re actually developing concrete solutions.”

When I travel around the world, I’m blown away by how these people are transforming lives. A growing number of the best and brightest university graduates in the U.S. and abroad are moving into this area (many clutching the book “How to Change the World,” a bible in the field).

It’s one of the most hopeful and helpful trends around. These folks aren’t famous, and they didn’t fly to Davos in first-class cabins or private jets, but they are showing that what it really takes to change the world isn’t so much wealth or power as creativity, determination and passion.

Friday, February 02, 2007

Blog Archive Bug?


Is this just my blog?

What happen to my 2007?

I'm stucked in 2006!!

Help!!!

How's it going?



Man! I was so like this guy!! It is not funny. I was so scared that people find out what is really going on, they might not think highly of me anymore... Yes, I have a huge pride to feed! :b
I'm glad I learnt to say things aren't so good when they really aren't. That makes the answer to "How's it going?" so much more meaningful. And it is liberating too. Pretending things are going well all the time is such an effort, not that I am consciously pretending it, but somehow, I do that to survive something, to look good I guess. Being able to put that aside and just express how things actually are and how I actually am, is like a tensed muscle releases. It's a great feeling.

But sometimes I find people say "How's it going?" instead of ask. Well, sometimes I find myself do that too, :( like I have no intention to listen to the answer anyway...
Hope I can catch myself on such behaviour!

Or is it because a lot of time "How's it going?" is treated the same as "Hi!"? Is it treated as just a form of greeting and not actually an invitation for a conversation?

So, to you, How's it going?